Example sentences of "[art] [adj] [noun] to go [prep] the " in BNC.
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1 | Witnesses , including an off-duty police inspector , would describe how a silver Renault twice crossed the central reservation to go past the scene of the broken-down car . |
2 | They tend to conclude their account with the formation of the National Government , giving ensuing events — in particular , the decision of the National Government to go to the country as a National Government — fairly perfunctory treatment ; and this despite the fact that , as Ball rightly claims , ‘ The radical restructuring of British politics after 1931 lies not in the events of 13–28 August , but in the changing attitudes within the National Government during September and October 1931 . ' |
3 | Dozzell becomes only the eighth player to go over the 400 mark for the club . |
4 | These will be handy when they need to put on the pink tie to go to the youth club disco . |
5 | The Oxford Regional Health Authority introduced ‘ the 80/20 rule , ’ under which fundholders agreed to contract for 80% of their hospital services budget in the first year to go to the same hospitals as in the preparatory year , leaving them free to move the remaining 20% if they so wished . |
6 | In only 14 cases did the user ‘ volunteer ’ in the first instance to go to the Drugs Council . |
7 | When the first contestant to go for the top prize , Marine Captain Richard MacCutchin who , oddly , specialized in haute cuisine , pulled it off by describing the ingredients of a royal banquet given by George VI to the president of France , three-quarters of American television sets were tuned in to watch him wrestle for the answers . |
8 | It was the first Shrine to go in the Reformation , burned to the ground . |
9 | I bet that was the first thing to go into the fire . |
10 | But Armstrong was found Guilty and became the only solicitor to go to the gallows for murder . |
11 | Prosecuting uneducated deaf people with no speech , and accepting what they said in their defence in those days was however a different matter altogether from allowing the same people to go into the witness box and testify against other people . |
12 | Apart from the grants to a local authority over which the Central Government exercise control and such other controls as are provided by legislation , the Central Government is in no stronger a position to take action against the local authority than an individual citizen — both have the same right to go to the courts to prevent illegal expenditure by ‘ relator action ’ at the instance of the Attorney-General of the Crown . |
13 | We began producing the big catalogues to go with the shows . |
14 | You have to choose the correct heights to go with the named bases . |
15 | Julia was half convinced that she should tell the young people to go to the cinema and dances again but she consulted Pat . |
16 | However , we still have to do the other bit to go in the , yes . |
17 | It suddenly struck him that this was not perhaps the best time to go into the history of the Established Church in England . |
18 | It might not be what the average first-time buyer had in mind , but the latest property to go in the window at Hobbs and Chambers estate agents is sure to catch the eye of passers-by . |
19 | Ringa Hustle … was one of the last dogs to go into the traps at wimbledon on Saturday … he was drawn in three alongside his kennel mate Lassa Java … the derby is the race of the year for greyhounds … 40,000 to the winner and there was only ever going to be one winner … |
20 | came from the hospital to do her midwifery and there was a boy in Wrexham Hospital he 'd give up the permanent job to go to The Yale |
21 | At the time of his death Campbell was unsuccessfully seeking backers for a jet-driven car to go through the sound barrier . |
22 | And among the leadership cadres of almost every industry there was a clear tendency to go beyond the Menshevik call for a degree of co-operation with the liberals , to the clearer cut , class-distinctive slogans of the Bolsheviks . |
23 | It 's also a personal ambition to go around the circuit . |
24 | As the setting was inside a series of computer games , there was no real requirement to go beyond the ‘ computer look . ’ |
25 | it was their duty as a cooperative organisation to go to the aid of the N.U.R . |
26 | Now he had a sudden ambition to go to the ball . |
27 | Tools are expensive , but it is often a false economy to go for the cheapest . |
28 | Rodgers knows there is a long way to go before the big one in December , but he has the makings of a strong , hard pack and the chance of additional talent behind them providing injury does not intervene . |
29 | Which is where Wales would love to be now — though , not withstanding the obvious improvement , there is a long way to go before the benefit of a more productive line-out provided by Anthony Copsey and Gareth Llewellyn and more solid scrummage based on Mike Griffiths , Garin Jenkins and Laurance Delaney is complemented by corresponding forward mobility and the consequent winning of clean , quick loose ball . |
30 | But Scotland has a long way to go before the symbiosis of locals and visitors becomes a reality . |